Stop #3 Lincoln Park - West
Introduction
Text-to-speech Audio
A few years after the park opened streetcars brought thousands of visitors from the city. Over several decades the park transformed as the playground we know it as today.
Images




Backstory and Context
Text-to-speech Audio
In the 1920s the first golf course was landscaped and the Zoo was built on the north end after being relocated from Wheeler Park. The lake was a popular spot for fishing and in the coldest winters people ice skated on its surface. As you explore the park, you will spot some of the best examples of WPA architecture in the city - the amphitheater, the picnic grounds east of the lake, and the old lake bathhouse which is now home to the Zoozeum. You can also still see a National Park Service-inspired sign at the west entrance to the park. In later years, some of the park land became home to many museums in the Adventure District.
The south part of the park below NE 36th was used for charitable homes like the country girls' farm and the Union Soldiers Home, a retirement home for veterans of the Civil War. It was these old soldiers who gave the park the name we know today when they petitioned the city council to name it in honor of President Abraham Lincoln. The home is still standing a few blocks south of the golf course and if you would like to honor those men who fought to save the Union, you can visit the nearby Union Soldiers Cemetery.
Cite This Entry
RL on behalf of Metropolitan Library System of Oklahoma County. "Stop #3 Lincoln Park - West." Clio: Your Guide to History. October 20, 2023. Accessed April 1, 2025. https://theclio.com/tour/2539/3